Street people in Brazil: a descriptive study of their sociodemographic profile and tuberculosis morbidity, 2014-2019

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Abstract

Objective: To characterize the sociodemographic profile of street people (SP) registered on the Single Register for Social Programs (CadÚnico) as at 2019 and tuberculosis morbidity in this population notified on the Notifiable Health Conditions Information System (Sinan) from 2014 to 2018. Methods: This was a descriptive study carried out with data from Sinan and CadÚnico. Results: 127,536 people registered on CadÚnico and 14,059 with tuberculosis notified on Sinan were included in the study. Higher concentrations of SP were found in the states of the South and Southeast regions. In the two subpopulations analyzed, there was a predominance of male SP (CadÚnico = 86.8%; Sinan = 80.9%), people of Black race/skin color (CadÚnico = 67.5%; Sinan = 64.1%) and with incomplete high school education or less (CadÚnico = 81.9%; Sinan = 60.1%). The high treatment dropout proportion (39.0%) was reflected in the high percentage of reentry and relapse. Conclusion: Tuberculosis continues to be a serious Public Health problem that aggravates survival conditions on the streets of Brazil.

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Silva, T. O., Vianna, P. J. de S., Almeida, M. V. G., Dos Santos, S. D., & Nery, J. S. (2021). Street people in Brazil: a descriptive study of their sociodemographic profile and tuberculosis morbidity, 2014-2019. Epidemiologia e Servicos de Saude, 30(1). https://doi.org/10.1590/S1679-49742021000100029

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